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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Core documents by: ![]() Date Place ![]() ![]() Core documents for: ![]() Italy Germany France Britain United States ![]() All documents for: ![]() Italy Germany France Britain United States ![]() Original language: ![]() English French German Italian Latin ![]() Browse documents by: ![]() Person ... by name ... by occupation ... by life dates Place Institution Legislation Case law ![]() Browse commentaries by: ![]() Person ... by name ... by occupation ... by life dates Place Institution Legislation Case law ![]() Browse database by: ![]() Key words ![]() ![]() Editors' login: ![]() | Simon Marion's plea on privileges, (1586) Source: Bibliothèque nationale de France : Mss. Fr. 22071 n°28 Citation: Simon Marion's plea on privileges (1586), Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900), eds L. Bently & M. Kretschmer, www.copyrighthistory.org Record Images Commentary Record-ID: f_1586 Full title Second plea concerning the printing of the "Works of Seneca", revised and annotated by the late Marc Antoine de Muret Full title original language Plaidoyez second sur l'impression des Oeuvres de Seneque, reveues & annotées par feu Marc Antoine de Muret Abstract It is not easy to find theoretical statements about the legal interests of the author in his work for the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, although in practice authors could eventually count on receiving some form of remuneration in exchange for the transfer of their original manuscript, especially from the end of the sixteenth century onwards. Simon Marion's plea before the Parlement of Paris (the supreme judicial court of the ancien régime) is often cited as the first explicit apprehension of the author's right, that is, as a right specific to him, deriving from his own labour and, in particular, the absolute right to communicate his work freely to the public. Although the reasons for which Marion won his case for his clients remain enigmatic, this famous judicial decision has also been referred to as a first step towards the recognition of literary property. Bibliography N/A Related documents in this database Author Simon Marion (1540-1605) Publisher N/A Location N/A Year 1586 Language French Source Bibliothèque nationale de France : Mss. Fr. 22071 n°28 Physical description N/A Illustrations tables N/A Persons referred to Bey, Gilles (fl.1586-1595) Marion, Simon (1540-1605) Muret, Marc Antoine de (1526-1585) Puys, Jacques du (fl.1586) Seneca, Lucius Annaeus (c.4 B.C.-c.65 A.D.) Persons referred to in commentary Aquinas, St Thomas (1225-1274) Aristotle (384 B.C.-322 B.C.) Bey, Gilles (fl.1586-1595) Bodin, Jean (1530-1596) Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas de Caritat, Marquis de (1743-1794) Diderot, Denis (1713-1784) Eloy d'Amerval (fl.1455-1508) Gaultier de Biauzat, Jean-François (1739-1815) Héricourt, Louis d' (1687-1752) John of Paris (c.1255-1306) Linguet, Simon Nicolas Henri (1736-1794) Locke, John (1632-1704) Marion, Simon (1540-1605) Muret, Marc Antoine de (1526-1585) Nivelle, Nicolas (fl.1583-1594) Puys, Jacques du (fl.1586) Renouard, Augustin-Charles (1794-1878) Séguier, Antoine-Louis (1726-1792) Seneca, Lucius Annaeus (c.4 B.C.-c.65 A.D.) Tinghi, Philippe (fl.1570-1586) Places referred to Rome Places referred to in commentary Paris Rome Legislation referred to N/A Legislation referred to in commentary N/A Cases referred to N/A Cases referred to in commentary N/A Institutions referred to University of Paris (Sorbonne) Institutions referred to in commentary King's Council of State (France) Parlement of Paris Key words book market classics, Greek and Latin humanism inventions labour theory learning, the advancement of monopoly moral obligations natural rights patents, printing privileges, printing property analogies property theory, authors' property public domain Renaissance, the reprints scholarly writing universities Responsible editor Frédéric Rideau Copyright status Original document is out of copyright. In so far as these scans are protected by copyright, they are made available on the same terms as translations and commentaries (see home page). | ||||||
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| Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900), Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, 10 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DZ, UK | |||||||